Opa!  I must know more!  I was looking at Asus EEE Pcs cause they
sounded wonderful but I thought Leopard requires alot of memory etc.
Maybe, I have to run my external drive?  If this is getting offtopic
or isn't allowed, just e-mail me offlist.  If not, I'm sure there are
lots of people who are interested in it.

Thanks,
Tiffanitsa

On 28/01/2009, Scott Ford <[email protected]> wrote:
> Hello you guys,
>       I was listening to mac break weekly the other day.  They said the
> following.  You can now create your own net book using your original
> leopard disk.  You can get a list of machines that this works with
> from engadget.  You still have to do some funky things like create
> some kind of disk for tricking the os into loading and going to a web
> site to download the correct drivers.  They equated it to a cross
> between installing os-x and windows.  This sounds really exciting.  oh
> you can do the automagic updates also.
> Scott  from
>
> On Jan 28, 2009, at 7:09 AM, Jacob Schmude wrote:
>
>> Hi Kevin
>> Netbooks are based on the Intel Atom processor, at least the ones
>> most people think of when the word netbook is mentioned. They are
>> standard x86. I know, for a fact, that versions for the Asus eee pc
>> and the MSI Wind exist, and the MSI wind version works on the
>> Samsung NC10 as well with some slight modifications. This is already
>> possible, though again the legality is in question and will be until
>> the question of Apple's eula is settled.
>>
>>
>> On Jan 28, 2009, at 07:03, Kevin Reeves wrote:
>>
>>> I'm currently downloading a torrent that is OS 10, but imaged for a
>>> 8 gig
>>> flash drive, bootable on an Intel or AMD based PC. I'm sure that
>>> eventually
>>> this will be available for the cell processors found in netbooks.
>>> I'm not
>>> saying this is legal, just that it's available for tinkering. I'll
>>> let you
>>> all know my findings.
>>>
>>>
>>
>>   The major difference between a thing that might go wrong and a
>> thing that cannot possibly go wrong is that when a thing that cannot
>> possibly go wrong goes wrong it usually turns out to be impossible
>> to get at or repair.
>>      --Douglas Adams
>>
>>
>
>
>

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